Corbett National Park Flora and Fauna

Jim Corbett National Park's flora and fauna is beyond imagination. One can say that ‘agar aapnecorbettnahidekha to duniya me kuchhbhinahidekha’ (If you have not seen Corbett national park, you have seen nothing on the planet).

Thick clammy deciduous forest principally comprises of sal, haldu, peepal, rohini and mango trees. Corbett Forest covers just about 73% of the Corbett tiger reserve, 10% of the reserve comprises of grasslands. It houses around 110 tree species, 50 types of mammals, 580 bird species and 25 reptile species. Tree thickness inside the reserve is higher in the territories of Sal forest, besides these, different varieties of flora in Corbett park incorporate the incidental simal (Bombaxcieba), jhingan (Lanneacoromandelica) and khair (Acacia catechu) which bear blossoms amid summers just before the coming of the spring is found along the Ramganga waterway.

A portion of the trees that can be normally recognized at the Corbett National Park are rohini, karipak, ber, dhak, simal, grewia, bael, kurha, jhingan, marorphali, khair, bakli, tendu, pula, sain and so forth. The nullahs and ravines that dive deep into the Corbett forest have groups of bamboo bushes and basic green bushes. The inconceivable extends of chaur or grass fields serve as perfect nibbling reason for herbivores. Truth be told right around 51 types of bushes and 33 types of bamboo flourish at the Corbett National Park.

The Fauna in Corbett National Park:

The first tiger reserve of India under ‘Project Tiger’ programme Jim Corbett National Parkis overall renowned for it's wild populace of Tigers, Leopards, Elephants.The World Wide Fund For Nature program aims to protect three of the five terrestrial flagship species, the tiger, the Asian elephant and the great one-horned rhinoceros, by restoring corridors of forest to link protected areas of Nepal and India, to empower wildlife migration.